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  • 1
    Keywords: seagrass ; tropical ; trait-based approach ; Hochschulschrift
    Description / Table of Contents: Seagrasses are marine flowering plants that inhabit the coastal area forming important ecosystems due to a number of ecosystem services they provide. However, they are subjected to both global and local impacts, including warming water temperatures and eutrophication, which threaten their survival. Despite the fact that the most diverse seagrass meadows are found in the tropical Indo-Pacific Region, there is less information about tropical species than their temperate counterparts. There are, therefore, knowledge gaps in the response of tropical seagrass meadows to environmental drivers and their links to ecosystem functions and services. In the last three decades, trait-based frameworks (TBFs) have advanced different fields of ecological research through establishing novel links between functional traits, environmental drivers and ecosystem functions. A number of concepts have been proposed in order to answer different ecological questions using a functional trait-based perspective. This field of research has been widely developed in terrestrial plants. However, the use of TBFs in seagrass research is currently in its infancy. The goal of this dissertation is the incorporation of TBFs into seagrass ecological research, by establishing novel links between seagrass traits, environmental drivers and ecosystem functions and services. The study site chosen for this work was Unguja Island (Zanzibar Archipelago, Tanzania). Unguja Island is located in the tropical Indo-Pacific region, and is considered one of the hotspots of seagrass biodiversity worldwide. The seagrass meadows in Unguja Island are subjected to a wide range of conditions, from pristine and oligotrophic to heavily impacted and eutrophic. Due to its high seagrass diversity and the variety of conditions under which seagrass survive, Unguja Island is a perfect laboratory for the study of seagrass communities using a TBF. The research questions selected for this dissertation have the goal of understanding the importance of traits at different organizational levels, from their individual responses to environmental drivers, to the effect of traits on the interspecific competition of seagrass species and, lastly, their effect on ecosystem functioning. First, to assess the knowledge gaps in seagrass trait-based research, I carried out a systematic review of the seagrass literature. The analysis showed that seagrass trait research has mostly focused on the effect of environmental drivers on traits (65%), whereas links between traits and functions are less common (33%). Despite the richness of trait-based data available, concepts related to TBFs are rare in the seagrass literature (7% of studies). These knowledge gaps in seagrasses indicate ample potential for further research. In order to address these knowledge gaps, I propose a TBF that can help guide future seagrass research. Secondly, the responses of traits of individual seagrass plants of tropical seagrass species (Halophila stipulacea, Cymodocea serrulata, Thalassia hemprichii and seedlings of Enhalus acoroides) were assessed to two environmental drivers: temperature (global) and nutrient enrichment (local). To achieve this aim, a 1-month experiment under laboratory conditions combining two temperature (maximum ambient temperature and current average temperature) and two nutrient (high and low nitrogen and phosphorus concentrations) treatments was conducted. The results of this experiment showed that trait responses are species-specific, and that temperature was a much more significant driver than nutrient enrichment. In the case of the seedlings of E. acoroides, they rely energetically in the reserves within the seedling and increasing temperature resulted in faster seedling development. T. hemprichii and C. serrulata showed an enhanced morphology, while the contrary was true for H. stipulacea. These results highlight the different effects and strategies that co-inhabiting seagrasses have in response to environmental changes. Thirdly, an experiment was developed in the field to test the effects of light shading and trampling due to the farming of Euchema denticulatum on seagrass meadows, an environmental driver endemic to the tropical region. Areas covered by T. hemprichii, H. stipulacea were selected for the building of seaweed farms for 3 months. Light was reduced in the seaweed farm plots by 75 to 90% by the end of a seaweed growth cycle. The responses of seagrass were, again, species-specific. H. stipulacea, despite its capacity for rapid growth, was significantly affected by the combination of shading and trampling under the seaweed farm treatment, while the climax seagrass species T. hemprichii was unaffected. Fourthly, to link individual plant traits to seagrass community level processes, I carried out an observational study in Unguja Island. The goal was to understand how seagrass traits linked to light and nutrient competition affected space preemption among seagrass species under different trophic scenarios. Traits determining the functional strategy of the seagrass showed that there was a size gradient in the seagrass species. When tested the effect of the difference in the functional strategy of species pairs, the probability of preemption was highest for the bigger species, increased when their size difference was higher and was not affected by the eutrophication. This indicated that the competitive interactions among seagrass species were asymmetrical, i.e. a species had a negative effect on another species, while the effect was not reciprocal and the driver behind space preemption was determined by traits related to the size of the seagrass plants. Fifthly, to study the link between seagrass traits and ecosystem functions, sediment cores were collected and compared within seagrass meadows of varying communities across sites of Unguja Island. The goal was to find out which seagrass traits are relevant indicators of carbon storage, and which environmental conditions constrain the storage of carbon in the sediments. Very fine sediments (〈125 μm) were negatively correlated to organic carbon in the sediment. Leaf area index of seagrass was positively correlated to organic carbon content in the sediment, indicating an effect of particle trapping and retention. Root maximum length was the most important functional trait driving carbon storage, suggesting that rooting depth is of fundamental importance for carbon accumulation. To conclude, TBFs can help to push seagrass research forward by the study of traits from the individual plant level, scaling up their effects on the seagrass community, interspecific competition and, lastly, ecosystem functioning. The individual trait responses of seagrass to environmental drivers, through adaptive processes, have fundamental consequences for interspecific competition and, ecosystem function. Changes in seagrass morphology can determine the outcome of interspecific competition for nutrients and light and, therefore, the final configuration of seagrass meadows. These traits of the species in the meadow ultimately determine the capacity of the meadow for carbon storage, which shows a prime example of how traits can affect important seagrass ecosystem functions.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (296 Seiten) , Illustrationen
    Language: English
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  • 2
    Keywords: Forschungsbericht
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (105 Seiten, 4,73 MB) , Illustrationen, Diagramme, Karten
    Language: German
    Note: Förderkennzeichen BMBF 03F0643A-B. - Verbund-Nummer 01108325 , Unterschiede zwischen dem gedruckten Dokument und der elektronischen Ressource können nicht ausgeschlossen werden
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    [Bremen] : [Leibniz Center for Tropical Marine Research (ZMT)]
    Keywords: Forschungsbericht
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (28 Seiten, 1,56 MB) , Diagramme, Illustrationen, Karten
    Language: German
    Note: Förderkennzeichen BMBF 03F0826A , Unterschiede zwischen dem gedruckten Dokument und der elektronischen Ressource können nicht ausgeschlossen werden
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2023-08-01
    Description: Farming of Eucheuma denticulatum is a major activity in Zanzibar affecting seagrass ecosystems primarily through shading and trampling. The aim of this study was to test the impacts of shading and trampling during seaweed farming on seagrass meadows composed by Halophila stipulacea and Thalassia hemprichii and their associated benthic macroalgae. Areas covered by these species were selected for the building of seaweed farms in three treatments: seaweed farm plots (with shading and trampling effects), trampling plots (with trampling effects only), and control plots (with no shading or trampling effects). Reduction of light within the plots was recorded over 9 weeks. Percentage cover of seagrasses and macroalgae and shoot density of seagrasses were measured over 12 weeks to assess the impact of shading and trampling by seaweed farming activities. Light was significantly reduced in the seaweed farm plots by 75 to 90% by the end of a seaweed growth cycle. H. stipulacea, despite its capacity for rapid growth, was significantly affected by the combination of shading and trampling under the seaweed farm treatment, while the climax seagrass species T. hemprichii was unaffected. Due to the decline in H. stipulacea, benthic macroalgae cover increased in the seaweed farm treatment, suggesting a change in seagrass community dynamics. In contrast, trampling had a negative effect on the benthic macroalgae as an isolated disturbance, which suggests that seagrasses are more resistant to trampling than macroalgae and would likely dominate the benthic macrophyte community under these conditions.
    Description: Leibniz-Zentrum für Marine Tropenforschung
    Description: Universität Bremen (DE)
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG)
    Keywords: ddc:631 ; Thalassia hemprichii ; Halophila stipulacea ; Eucheuma denticulatum ; Shading ; Trampling
    Language: English
    Type: doc-type:article
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2014-08-29
    Description: Atmospheric carbon dioxide emissions cause a decrease in the pH and aragonite saturation state of surface ocean water. As a result, calcifying organisms are expected to suffer under future ocean conditions, but their physiological responses may depend on their nutrient status. Because many coral reefs experience high inorganic nutrient loads or seasonal changes in nutrient availability, reef organisms in localized areas will have to cope with elevated carbon dioxide and changes in inorganic nutrients. Halimeda opuntia is a dominant calcifying primary producer on coral reefs that contributes to coral reef accretion. Therefore, we investigated the carbon and nutrient balance of H. opuntia exposed to elevated carbon dioxide and inorganic nutrients. We measured tissue nitrogen, phosphorus and carbon content as well as the activity of enzymes involved in inorganic carbon uptake and nitrogen assimilation (external carbonic anhydrase and nitrate reductase, respectively). Inorganic carbon content was lower in algae exposed to high CO2, but calcification rates were not significantly affected by CO2 or inorganic nutrients. Organic carbon was positively correlated to external carbonic anhydrase activity, while inorganic carbon showed the opposite correlation. Carbon dioxide had a significant effect on tissue nitrogen and organic carbon content, while inorganic nutrients affected tissue phosphorus and N:P ratios. Nitrate reductase activity was highest in algae grown under elevated CO2 and inorganic nutrient conditions and lowest when phosphate was limiting. In general, we found that enzymatic responses were strongly influenced by nutrient availability, indicating its important role in dictating the local responses of the calcifying primary producer H. opuntia to ocean acidification.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2015-06-30
    Description: Ocean acidification studies in the past decade have greatly improved our knowledge of how calcifying organisms respond to increased surface ocean CO2 levels. It has become evident that, for many organisms, nutrient availability is an important factor that influences their physiological responses and competitive interactions with other species. Therefore, we tested how simulated ocean acidification and eutrophication (nitrate and phosphate enrichment) interact to affect the physiology and ecology of a calcifying chlorophyte macroalga (Halimeda opuntia (L.) J.V. Lamouroux) and its common noncalcifying epiphyte (Dictyota sp.) in a 4-week fully crossed multifactorial experiment. Inorganic nutrient enrichment (+NP) had a strong influence on all responses measured with the exception of net calcification. Elevated CO2 alone significantly decreased electron transport rates of the photosynthetic apparatus and resulted in phosphorus limitation in both species, but had no effect on oxygen production or respiration. The combination of CO2 and +NP significantly increased electron transport rates in both species. While +NP alone stimulated H. opuntia growth rates, Dictyota growth was significantly stimulated by nutrient enrichment only at elevated CO2, which led to the highest biomass ratios of Dictyota to Halimeda. Our results suggest that inorganic nutrient enrichment alone stimulates several aspects of H. opuntia physiology, but nutrient enrichment at a CO2 concentration predicted for the end of the century benefits Dictyota sp. and hinders its calcifying basibiont H. opuntia.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2024-02-07
    Description: In the last three decades, quantitative approaches that rely on organism traits instead of taxonomy have advanced different fields of ecological research through establishing the mechanistic links between environmental drivers, functional traits, and ecosystem functions. A research subfield where trait-based approaches have been frequently used but poorly synthesized is the ecology of seagrasses; marine angiosperms that colonized the ocean 100M YA and today make up productive yet threatened coastal ecosystems globally. Here, we compiled a comprehensive trait-based response-effect framework (TBF) which builds on previous concepts and ideas, including the use of traits for the study of community assembly processes, from dispersal and response to abiotic and biotic factors, to ecosystem function and service provision. We then apply this framework to the global seagrass literature, using a systematic review to identify the strengths, gaps, and opportunities of the field. Seagrass trait research has mostly focused on the effect of environmental drivers on traits, i.e., “environmental filtering” (72%), whereas links between traits and functions are less common (26.9%). Despite the richness of trait-based data available, concepts related to TBFs are rare in the seagrass literature (15% of studies), including the relative importance of neutral and niche assembly processes, or the influence of trait dominance or complementarity in ecosystem function provision. These knowledge gaps indicate ample potential for further research, highlighting the need to understand the links between the unique traits of seagrasses and the ecosystem services they provide.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
    Format: text
    Format: text
    Format: other
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2023-12-18
    Description: To assess the sea urchin distribution across the seagrass species, we measured the sea urchin density in three monospecific meadows (T. ciliatum, C. serrulata and H. uninervis) and two mixed meadows (dominated by T. hemprichii and by S. isoetifolium) in the study site. We selected three patches per meadow type. Each patch was 25 square meters, delimited with a transect tape. We counted the number of sea urchins at high tide, and divided this number by the surface of the patch to calculate sea urchin density per square meter of meadow (individuals per square meter).
    Keywords: Area; Biodiversity mapping; BIOMAP; Calculated, see abstract; Counted; grazing; Number; seagrass traits; sea urchin; Site; Species; Tripneustes gratilla; tropical seagrass; Unguja_Island_Changuu2; Zanzibar Archipealgo, Tanzania
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 90 data points
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2023-12-18
    Description: We measured seagrass leaf area and canopy height. We took six biomass cores in random points in the study site Changuu Island. We then measured with a ruler the canopy height (centimeters) as the length of the leaves (from meristem to the tip of the leaf) of each seagrass species in each core. For T. ciliatum, we measured the length of the stem separately and coupled it to the corresponding shoot. Stem and leaf lengths were then summed to obtain canopy height. The length (centimeters) and width (centimeters) of each leaf was measured with a ruler and then multiplied to calculate the leaf area per species (squared centimeters). Special case for T. ciliatum: Some of the datapoints show no data for leaf lenght and width for this species. In these cases, the shoot has been overgrazed and therefore there was no leaf material to measure, and only the stem length was measured.
    Keywords: Calculated, see abstract; Core; CORE; grazing; Identification; Number; Ruler tape; Seagrass, canopy height; Seagrass, leaf area; Seagrass, leaf length; Seagrass, leaf width; seagrass traits; sea urchin; Site; Species; Thalassodendron ciliatum, stem length; tropical seagrass; Unguja_Island_Changuu1; Zanzibar Archipealgo, Tanzania
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 19385 data points
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2023-12-18
    Description: We measured the % carbon (C), nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) content of seagrass leaves. We took three seagrass leaf samples in five meadows of each seagrass species (T. ciliatum, T. hemprichii, H. uninervis, S. isoetifolium, C. serrulata) in Changuu Island and transported them in a cooled container to the Institute of Marine Sciences (Stone Town, Zanzibar). The leaves were cleaned of epiphytes and rinsed with distilled water. We separated the second leaf of each shoot for the measurement, dried them in the oven at 60 degrees for 48 hours, and ground them to a fine powder with mortar and pestle. The samples were then transported to the Leibniz Centre of Tropical Marine Research in Bremen (Germany). Carbon and nitrogen % content was measured in a Euro EA 3000 (EuroVector) analyzer. For the determination of the % phosphorous content of the leaves, we used an alkaline persulphate oxidation method (Koroleff, 1983). We transferred 1 mg of ground sample into a vial and added 4.5 ml of distilled water and 0.5 ml of Oxisolv reagent (Merck). The vials were closed and placed in the oven for one hour at 120 °C. After letting the samples cool down at room temperature, they were centrifuged at 4700 rpm for ten minutes. Three mL of supernatant were placed into another vial and 0.0626 mL of ascorbic acid reagent were added. After mixing, 0.0626 mL of molybdate mix-reagent was added. After a reaction time of 10 minutes, the samples were transferred to a 1 cm macrocuvette. We then measured absorbance at 880 nm in a Shimadzu UV-1700 UV-VIS dual-beam photometer for the % P determination. Finally, we calculated the ratios between C, N and P: C:N.
    Keywords: Atomic weight; Biodiversity mapping; BIOMAP; Calculated, see abstract; Carbon; Carbon/Nitrogen ratio; Carbon/Phosphorus ratio; Determined according to Koroleff (1983); Element analyser Euro EA 3000; grazing; Nitrogen; Number; Phosphorus; Seagrass, leaf carbon; Seagrass, leaf nitrogen; Seagrass, leaf phosphorus; seagrass traits; sea urchin; Site; Species; tropical seagrass; Unguja_Island_Changuu2; Zanzibar Archipealgo, Tanzania
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 630 data points
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